Knightly News

Mount nurses bring half ton of health supplies to Dominican Republic

(Left) Jessica Matuszewski, a Mount Saint Mary College student
from Goshen, NY, helps care for a young patient in the Dominican
Republic. (Right) Sean Murphy, a Mount Saint Mary College student
from Port Jervis, NY, speaks with a family through an interpreter
during a health assessment in the Dominican Republic.

Nearly two dozen Mount Saint Mary College nursing students,
carrying a half ton of vitamins and medical supplies between them,
traveled to the Dominican Republic last month on a humanitarian
mission.

With faculty members Dianne Murphy and Ann Corcoran, they served
in the poorest communities -- the bateyes, or shantytowns – as
volunteers with the not-for-profit Foundation for Peace, dedicated
to helping people in materially impoverished areas by providing
educational support, healthcare access, economic opportunity, and
hope.

Last spring, professor Murphy, along with members of Sigma Theta
Tau International Honor Society of Nursing, visited the Dominican
Republic, where she helped with medical supplies, set up clinics,
and provided nursing care.

This year’s Mount group aided some 500 people each day during
the week of their journey.

Patients were treated or referred for skin infections, dental
problems and fungal infections. They often asked for vitamins and
bandages – long term needs -- sometimes overlooking a more serious
ailment.

“A family came in asking for vitamins, but neglected to ask for
help for their little boy’s foot,” explained Jessica Matuszewski, a
Mount senior from Goshen, NY, who noticed a bad burn on the child’s
ankle and summoned the doctor.

Matuszewski got to assist in the procedure to debride the skin,
which according to Murphy is a painful surgical process, during
which dead or contaminated tissue and foreign matter is removed
from a wound. Debriding is so painful it is usually completed with
morphine.

“We were only able to give this little boy two children’s
Tylenol and a lollipop,” said Murphy, noting the lack of health
care services available in the shantytowns.

Murphy hopes to expand the program next year to include
disciplines in addition to nursing, such as students in education
and psychology.